Texas Organizing Project honors Hispanic Heritage Month

The following statement is from Christina Quintero, Texas Organizing Project (TOP) board member from Houston, as the organization celebrates the start of Hispanic Heritage Month:

“Latinos are deeply woven into the cultural fabric of our state and nation, overcoming societal barriers to move our communities forward each and every day.

“As we recognize Hispanic Heritage Month, Texas Organizing Project honors the courageous contributions of Latinos – including our Afro-Latino and Indigenous brothers and sisters – who have poured their heart and soul into our movement’s pursuit of justice and freedom for all.”

Mary Guzman, TOP Education Fund board member from Dallas, added:

“At TOP, we know Latino liberation is intrinsically linked to Black liberation. We believe it’s our moral obligation to acknowledge, challenge, and correct anti-Blackness and colorism embedded in our institutions – an ugly byproduct of colonialism – that for too long has collectively held us back. Our solidarity is powerful. We are stronger together.

“That’s why we celebrate Latinidad through our steadfast commitment to racial and economic justice, organizing to improve the lives of working people – regardless of age, race, faith, or spoken language – so we can rise to create a brighter Texas built on dignity and respect for every person.”

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About Texas Organizing Project:

TOP organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. For more information, visit organizetexas.org.

TOP Flexes Worker Power This Labor Day

The following is a statement from Le Reta Gatlin-McDavid, Board Member of Texas Organizing Project (TOP), on the organization’s observance of Labor Day this year:

“Labor Day is far more than just a holiday. It’s a day dedicated to honoring every worker who has ever contributed to this country and moved it forward — those who cook our food, clean our rooms, teach our kids, care for our sick, build our neighborhoods, and everything in between.

“Too many working families are still scraping by, struggling to cover the essentials — like rent, childcare, medication, and groceries — all while billionaires keep getting richer.

“But as workers, we have to remember that WE collectively have the power to flip the script. Every right we have on the job — weekends, overtime pay, safer work conditions — was won because workers stood together. Nothing was given to us. We had to fight for it, and we’re still fighting today. And we’re not giving up or giving in.”

Amanda Juarez, Staff Union Secretary of Texas Organizing Project (TOP), added:

“As a unionized workplace, TOP proudly stands shoulder to shoulder with labor allies in our movement to fight back against the anti-worker policies of this oligarch-run Trump regime. Workers’ rights are human rights, and no authority will ever strip us of this.

“Working together, Black and Latino Texans serve as a powerful economic engine to our state, and our organization will continue to build alongside them to win a future where ALL Texas workers can live free and thrive — no matter our age, race, gender, faith, or preferred language.”

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About Texas Organizing Project:

Texas Organizing Project (TOP) organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. For more information, visit organizetexas.org.

TOP on Trump attacking cashless bail: “Texans need investments in justice, not mass incarceration”

The following statement is from Laquita Garcia, Statewide Right2Justice Policy Coordinator with the Texas Organizing Project (TOP), in response to President Trump signing an executive order seeking to end cashless bail:

“Texans need investments in justice, not mass incarceration.

“Donald Trump’s out-of-touch approach to bail and public safety is a waste of taxpayer money that upholds a two-tiered justice system — one for the wealthy and well-connected like him, and another for everyone else. Trump’s approach won’t make Texas safer.

Thousands sit locked up in Texas jails only because they can’t afford bail — not because they pose a public safety risk. Studies continue to show that the majority of those in jail in our state have not been convicted of a crime; these Texans simply can’t buy their freedom.

“Trump’s executive order attacks pre-trial justice, expanding the harmful use of money bail and pre-trial detention, which disproportionately hurts everyday working-class Black and Latino Texans.

“The question we should really be asking ourselves is how we create a system that humanely addresses root causes of crime, while protecting the constitutional rights of all Texans — no matter one’s race, age, income, or ZIP Code. That means investing in mental health care, addressing poverty, and offering tangible life-changing opportunities for impacted community members.”

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About Texas Organizing Project:

Texas Organizing Project (TOP) organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. For more information, visit organizetexas.org.

Texas Organizing Project: This Is White Supremacy at Work—Not a Flaw, but the System Working as Designed

Republican leaders ram through gerrymandered maps, proving once again that the system is doing exactly what it was built to do: protect white political power and erase Black and Latino Texans from decision-making.

Texas Organizing Project (TOP) is calling out Republican leaders in the Legislature for doing exactly what the system was built to do: using gerrymandered maps to strip Black and Latino Texans of political power. This is not a glitch; it is white supremacy operating as designed.

“Let’s be clear, this isn’t some accident or misstep. This is how white supremacy is supposed to work,” said Brianna Brown, Co-Executive Director of TOP. “These maps are a deliberate tool to keep Black and Latino Texans out of power. They’re not broken, they’re working exactly as intended.”

Black and Latino Texans account for nearly all of the state’s population growth over the past decade, yet Republican-drawn maps do not reflect this reality.

“When you see Republicans drawing maps to erase Black and Latino communities, don’t call it a failure, call it what it is: White supremacy doing exactly what it’s supposed to do,” Brown said. “They want us silent and invisible. But we know what’s going on, and we’re not going anywhere. We’ve survived worse, and we’re not shutting up or backing down now.”

TOP stressed that fair maps for all, regardless of Texans’ race, age, faith, gender, or income, are essential to ensuring representation on health care, housing, education, and other everyday issues that impact our lives.

“Politicians should not be picking their voters,” Brown said. “Our communities will continue to organize, mobilize, and demand fair representation; in the courts, in the streets, and at the ballot box. The power of Black and Latino Texans will not be erased.”

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About Texas Organizing Project:

Texas Organizing Project (TOP) organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. For more information, visit organizetexas.org.

Texas Organizing Project: Free Rep. Collier

The following statement is from Brianna Brown, Co-Executive Director of Texas Organizing Project (TOP):

“Republican leaders are targeting a Black woman legislator, Rep. Nicole Collier, because she refuses to play along with their discriminatory power grab. Forcing her to accept a police escort to leave the chamber is about intimidation, surveillance, and silencing — and Black communities across Texas know exactly what that looks like.

“These redistricting maps were designed to strip Black and Latino voters of their political voice. Now Republicans are using the same heavy-handed tactics, recycled from segregationists’ playbook, against a Black elected official who dared to resist. Black leaders shouldn’t be treated like political prisoners. Police escorts for elected officials = surveillance and intimidation. #FreeRepCollier

“TOP stands with Rep. Collier. We refuse to accept attacks on Black communities, their leaders, and their right to fair representation. We will keep organizing until every Texan has a real voice in our democracy. #ProtectBlackVoices”

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About Texas Organizing Project:
Texas Organizing Project (TOP) organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. For more information, visit organizetexas.org.

Local advocates, community groups celebrate securing$100 million for housing in Houston’s disaster recovery plan

Houston City Council today voted to submit Mayor Whitmire’s disaster recovery plan for 2024’s Hurricane Beryl and the Derecho to the federal government. The following statements in reaction to the vote are from local housing advocates and community organizations who played a key role in securing $100 million dedicated to housing in this disaster recovery plan.

Synnachia McQueen, Houston resident and TOP Harris County member:

“As a longtime leader with TOP, I care deeply about the long-term recovery and resilience of our communities. It was intensive community organizing from TOP and our Houston housing justice allies West Street Recovery, Texas Housers, Texas Appleseed, Northeast Action Collective, Union of Concerned Scientists and the Coalition for the Environment, Equity and Resilience, that made this $100 million allocated for housing repairs possible in the City’s final disaster recovery funding plan.

“Houston residents loudly and consistently spoke up on this matter, reminding our city elected leaders that we as community members wouldn’t accept zero dollars allocated toward housing that was in the initial disaster recovery plan. It was truly grassroots organizing and Council champions that secured this $100 million win.

“Directly-impacted Houstonians like myself will continue to have our voices heard to ensure accountability and transparency on how these now-passed disaster recovery funding dollars will be spent.”

Julia Orduña, southeast Texas regional director, Texas Housers: 

“Disaster Recovery funds were allocated directly to the City of Houston to respond to the community’s inability to recover. When the Action Plan was released, we saw the gap in the recovery process and programs to be administered, we participated in the public engagement process, and the government responded to the community’s concern. 

“We hear about roofs still tarped and elevators still broken at senior facilities. That $100 million will truly support needs across single-family and multi-family housing that have not attained stability post-disaster.” 

Stephany Valdez, Water Justice Organizer, Coalition for Environment, Equity, and Resilience: 

“Houstonians made it clear: we deserve more disaster recovery dollars.

“The original plan allocated $0 for housing despite tremendous need. Houstonians—-our neighbors, organizers, and advocates—fought until $100 million was secured for housing and home repairs. 

“The Coalition for the Environment, Equity and Resilience will keep standing with communities to make sure every dollar delivers real repairs, restores dignity, and builds a safer future for us all.”

Madison Sloan, Disaster Recovery and Fair Housing Project Director, Texas Appleseed:

“These are critical resources for housing recovery in Houston –  particularly now, when federal funding for both housing and disaster recovery are under threat. Texas Appleseed is proud to support the families and communities who fought for what they need to recover and to mitigate the impact of the next disaster.” 

Zoe Middleton, Associate Director for Just Climate Resilience, Union of Concerned Scientists: 

“Zero dollars spent on housing was always unacceptable and the proposed $50 million was always insufficient. Repairing, preserving, and creating resilient affordable housing is a non-negotiable in disaster recovery. As Houstonians face increasingly extreme weather, a fickle insurance market and an affordable housing shortage, this hard won $100 million in housing funding will throw storm survivors a lifeline.”

Doris Brown, NAC organizer and disaster survivor: 

“This victory shows the power of community, the power of a clear vision and the power of never giving up. In a city hammered time and again by disasters, the Mayor’s initial plan was an insult to survivors. We are glad that he changed his mind and grateful to the council members who saw the need for housing investment. As the federal government steps away from helping communities, cuts FEMA and threatens HUD there really was no other chance, and this was a win for all of us.”

Regina Johnson, NAC organizer:

As the proverb says, if you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together. We stick together and we grow together!”

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Three Years After Dobbs Overturned Roe, Texas Leaders Condemn Deadly Toll of Abortion Ban & Health Crisis

Sepsis. Delays. Death. Black women like Porsha Ngumezi are dying in the state ranked worst in the nation for health care access.

Three years after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, clearing the way for Texas’s total abortion ban, the consequences are no longer theoretical; they are fatal. Porsha Ngumezi, Josseli Barnica, and Nevaeh Crain died of sepsis after suffering delays in care while experiencing pregnancy loss. Their stories are part of a documented rise in maternal deaths and life-threatening infections that accelerated after Texas fully implemented its abortion ban following the Dobbs decision, as exposed in a landmark 2025 investigation by ProPublica.

Just this month, a new report from the Commonwealth Fund ranks Texas worst in the nation for health care access and affordability. The crisis is hitting Black and Latino Texans hardest, from skyrocketing uninsured rates to avoidable deaths from delayed care.

Shellie Hayes-McMahon, Executive Director of Planned Parenthood Texas Votes, said:

This is what state-sanctioned neglect looks like. Women like Porsha, Josseli, and Nevaeh didn’t die because of rare conditions, they died because lawmakers criminalized standard medical care and created a culture of fear inside hospitals.

The Dobbs decision gave Texas the green light to enforce its total abortion ban. What followed was a spike in sepsis and a rise in maternal deaths. We are now seeing the results: more maternal deaths, more preventable suffering, and a health system collapsing under political extremism. 

Texas can’t afford another year of this, much less another life lost. PPTV will make sure Texans remember who put these cruel policies in place—at the ballot box and beyond. This ban won’t go unchecked.

Brianna Brown, Co-Executive Director of Texas Organizing Project, added:

“What’s happening in Texas isn’t an accident, it’s a strategy. A strategy to control our bodies, silence our voices, and abandon our communities. Black and Latino Texans are dying because politicians would rather score points than protect people.

But we are not standing by. We are knocking doors, testifying, voting, and organizing until we have a state that values our lives, not just our labor or our pain. Texas belongs to the people, and we’re fighting like it.”

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The Texas Organizing Project organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. Learn more at organizetexas.org.

Planned Parenthood Texas Votes (PPTV) is the nonpartisan policy, advocacy and political arm for the Planned Parenthood affiliates in Texas.

Houston community groups demand increased spending on housing in federal disaster recovery package as Whitmire welcomes HUD Secretary

Texas Organizing Project (TOP), West Street Recovery, Texas Housers, Northeast Action Collaborative (NAC), and the Coalition for the Environment, Equity and Resilience (CEER) are demanding that Mayor Whitmire and council members increase the allocation for housing in the City’s Community Development Block Grant – Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) funds.

The community groups are calling for a total housing investment of at least $115 million in the $314.6 million relief funds package, claiming Mayor Whitmire’s recent $50 million allocation is inadequate. This demand comes as Mayor Whitmire welcomes HUD Secretary Turner while the Trump administration angles to slash housing investments and upends disaster forecasting and response through his attacks on FEMA and NOAA. 

Houston’s housing crisis is made worse by increasingly extreme weather. Tens of thousands of Houston families are still living with damage from Hurricane Beryl and the 2024 derecho, with several facing leaking roofs, structural hazards, and mold. For many, the next severe storm could bring even more destruction — because repairs and weatherization haven’t happened.  

The community groups urged the Whitmire administration to allocate funding for housing in its initial disaster recovery proposal, where $0 in funding was dedicated to housing at the start.

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About Texas Organizing Project:

TOP organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. For more information, visit organizetexas.org.

TOP Board Names Brianna Brown Sole Executive Director to Lead Organization Into Next Chapter

Brown will start this position January 2026, marking a renewed commitment to uniting Black and Latino Texans in the fight for democracy and shared power

Texas Organizing Project (TOP) Board of Directors announced today that Brianna Brown has been named the organization’s next and sole Executive Director, effective January 2026. Since 2020, Brown and Michelle Tremillo, one of TOP’s Co-Founders, have been Co-Executive directors, together leading the largest community-based organization in Texas.  

“As Co-Presidents of TOP, we are thrilled to name Brianna Brown as the next sole Executive Director of this organization we love,” said Dr. Doshie Piper and Maria Victoria de la Cruz. “Brianna brings deep strategy, clarity of purpose, and unshakable commitment to our members. She has long been one of the boldest architects of TOP’s evolution — and her vision for uniting Black and Latino communities in a shared fight for justice is exactly what this moment demands. This is how we win the Texas of our dreams – a Texas For All, where every person can live their best life, regardless of where they call home or what language they speak.”

“I’m deeply excited about what’s possible for our organization in this next chapter with Brianna as Executive Director. She has vision and an undeniable drive to positively change the landscape of our state and communities” added Debra Walker, Board President of Texas Organizing Project Education Fund (TOPEF). “I see an organization that continues to grow its power — not just through policy wins, but through the everyday transformation of people stepping into leadership and fostering a vibrant community of leaders who can drive meaningful change. It fills me with joy to see new leaders of all ages and backgrounds rise up from our base to organize with love, urgency, and bold vision.”

Brown, a fourth-generation Texan raising two fifth-generation daughters, joined TOP in 2013 as a healthcare organizer. Since then, she has helped shape every major chapter of the organization’s growth — leading local campaigns, launching TOP’s communications and narrative strategy, co-founding the landmark BlackTOP program, and steering internal transformations to root the organization in pro-Black values. She became Deputy Director, then Co-Executive Director in 2020.

“Brianna is the right leader for this next chapter,” said Michelle Tremillo. “She’s a seasoned strategist and a movement builder, but more importantly, she is deeply grounded in the belief that Black and Latino communities deserve to lead. Her work has always centered on shared power. I’m so excited to see her lead TOP into its future.”

In 2023, Brown led more than 80 staff and members on a pilgrimage to Montgomery and Selma — a powerful turning point in shaping TOP’s Stronger Together initiative and deepening its internal commitment to pro-Black organizing. That same year, BlackTOP — the largest-ever investment in Black voters in Texas — reached over 1.4 million Texans through a strategic blend of door-knocking, digital outreach, and voter education. These programs connected voters across county lines and generations in pursuit of a shared, inclusive democracy.

“I’ve never known myself outside of a Black political identity,” Brown said. “I’ve been organizing since I was a teenager, and the truth is — I’m about the work. TOP is about building real political homes for our communities, where our values, our power, and our voices lead. I’m honored to step into this role, and I’m ready to lead with clarity, care, and a vision for a Texas where all of us — Black and Latino, across class, ZIP Code, and immigration status — thrive together.”

Leaders Praise Brown’s Vision and Track Record:

“Brianna builds power from the ground up. Not for one election cycle, but for the long haul. She’s a movement strategist who listens deeply and leans into the communities she organizes with, making sure their voices shape the vision and the victories.”DaMareo Cooper & Analilia Mejia, Co-Executive Directors, Popular Democracy

“Some people talk about change. Brianna builds it — block by block, policy by policy, election by election. She understands that local organizing isn’t the end goal — it’s the engine that moves entire systems. Texas is different because of her, and the ripple effects are just beginning.” Commissioner Rodney Ellis, Harris County Commissioners Court, Pct. 1

“Brianna leads with vision, strategy, and a deep-rooted commitment to our people. She has an unwavering belief in the power of Black and Latino Texans to shape a new future. Naming her sole Executive Director is a declaration that TOP is ready to go deeper, bolder, and be even more rooted in building a Texas rewritten by its true majority.” Tarsha Jackson, Houston City Council Member, Dist. B

“Brianna is a bold and compassionate leader who understands that organizing is sacred work. She brings heart, vision, and a deep commitment to justice that will continue to shape Texas. I’m proud to stand with her as she leads TOP into its next chapter.” — Pastor Dr. Frederick D. Haynes, III, Friendship West Baptist Church  

“Brianna is one of the most visionary movement leaders in the country. She turns values into strategy and strategy into power — exactly what this moment demands.”Maurice Mitchell, National Director, Working Families Party

“Brianna Brown is the kind of leader who understands that lasting change starts with the people most impacted — and she never loses sight of that. Whether she’s mobilizing voters, sharpening strategy, or calling out injustice, Brianna brings vision and grit rooted in community. Texas — and the country— is stronger because of her leadership.”Andrea Mercado, President & CEO, The Climate & Clean Energy Equity Fund

Brown serves as Vice Chair of Popular Democracy’s board and she also sits on the board of its advocacy arm, Popular Democracy Action. Additionally, Brown is board chair of the Texas For All political table, a coalition that is building progressive infrastructure across the state. During the 2022 election cycle, Brown’s leadership was featured in the documentary TEXAS, USA.  Her story — like TOP’s — is a testament to the grit, imagination, and collective action required to preserve and expand democracy.

“Texas isn’t an unengaged state — it’s a place full of untapped power. And we’re building the infrastructure to unleash it,” Brown said. “And that’s what we’re changing. We’re turning Texas Teal. We’re proving that progressive power is possible when we organize year-round, invest in our people, and stay rooted in joy, strategy, and solidarity.”

TOP will continue its year-round campaigns in criminal justice, housing, healthcare, and voting rights while deepening its organizing presence in Bexar, Dallas, Harris, Tarrant, and Fort Bend counties.

“The stakes are too high to go it alone,” Brown added. “We are stronger together — and this next chapter for TOP is about bringing even more of our people into the fight for a future where we all belong.”

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About Texas Organizing Project (TOP):
The Texas Organizing Project organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. Learn more at organizetexas.org.

TOP: “They Delayed Our Freedom, But Now We Get To Define It”

This Juneteenth, we celebrate us — our legacy, our resilience, and our joy. We commemorate that moment in Galveston, Texas, when enslaved Black people were FINALLY told they were free, two and a half years after emancipation had officially been declared. We honor the truth that Black freedom has never simply been granted — it’s always been fought for, carved out, and protected with everything we’ve had.

At TOP, we will be returning to Galveston, not just to mark a date in history, but to connect the spirit of our ancestors who dreamed of a world we’re still building. We’re making a pilgrimage to the birthplace of Juneteenth — to celebrate how far we’ve come, and to recommit to our ongoing journey toward liberation.

“Juneteenth is not just a reminder of delayed freedom, it’s a reminder of unstoppable Black courage and vision,” said Dr. Doshie Piper, TOP Board Co-President.

“Even after centuries of being chained, cheated, and treated callously, we are STILL here — leading, creating, loving, and rising. This day is about the power we have always had within us. And as we celebrate, we remember we come from people who made liberation possible through their faith, inner-fire, and most importantly, being there for each other.” 

Tarasha Hollis, Statewide Political Data Coordinator, shares her perspective on the significance of Juneteenth and recommitting to the fight for true freedom:

“We are standing on the shoulders of ancestors who faced terror, yet still found ways to share joy; people who were denied basic rights, yet still found ways to build futures. But let’s be abundantly clear: there are politicians today who are working just as hard to roll back our rights — to silence our voices, ban our stories, and inflict harm on our communities. One of the most critical ways we can fight back against reductive and oppressive politicians and policies, is by deciding to still find joy, to still celebrate each other and our wins, and to continue to build community amongst one another. Our shared joy must be our fuel. We owe it to those who laid the foundation to organize, vote, and demand better. THAT is how we honor Juneteenth.”

Even as we withstand modern-day attacks on our people — from book bans to housing injustice, voter suppression to ICE raids, we know the truth: Black Texans are not new to the struggle, and we’re never without power.

This is Juneteenth. We won’t just reflect, we’ll reignite. We rise in celebration. We rise in memory. We rise in action. 

Because our freedom is sacred and our joy is political. And our movement will never be stopped.

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About Texas Organizing Project:

TOP organizes Black and Latino communities in Dallas, Harris, Bexar, and Fort Bend counties with the goal of transforming Texas into a state where working people of color have the power and representation they deserve. For more information, visit organizetexas.org.